Dr.
Valentine is co-author of
Draft
Horses, an Owner's Manual. She is a graduate of the Veterinary College at
Cornell University. After receiving her degree she spent a short time in private
practice. Feeling compelled to understand more about the diseases she was trying
to treat, she left practice to begin training in Veterinary Pathology in the
Comparative Medicine Division of the Johns Hopkins Medical College. From there
she went back to the Veterinary College at Cornell, then recently took on a
position in the College of Veterinary Medicine at Oregon State University. She
passed the boards of the American College of Veterinary Pathologists in 1985. As
a diagnostic pathologist, she deals with diseases of many different species on a
daily basis.

A horse owner herself, she started out with two saddle horsesher
chestnut grade gelding Millertime (right) and her husband's Thoroughbred Murphy
(not shown). Due to her studies of equine polysaccharide storage myopathy
(EPSM) in draft horses, she now owns four
heavy horses. The two additional horsesa Belgian/Thoroughbred riding horse
Astaire (blonde ears over her right shoulder) that used to "tie up,"
and a bay Belgian/Percheron working draft Jerry (left) that had developed a
stiff hind limb gait, muscle loss, and lack of energycame to her because
of their muscle problems. She is happy to report that all four horses are doing
extremely well on the new low carbohydrate, high fat diet designed by Dr. Harold
(Skip) Hintz and Dr. Arleigh Reynolds, nutritionists at Cornell, to control this
problem.

Dr. Beth continues to have a special interest in diseases of muscles and
nerves (neuromuscular diseases). Recognizing that, in veterinary medicine,
proper muscle function is most important to the well-being of horses, she
specializes in equine neuromuscular disease. In addition, she has taken on the
task of trying to better understand all equine disease. She is particularly
interested in problems that plague draft horses.

Dr.
Beth is is our virtual vet, available online to answer your questions about
EPSM and other draft-animal healthcare concerns. The Virtual Vet Is in.